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Recipe request: Incorporating duxelles into imitation ground meat patties
  • I tried it. The duxelle mix blended really well. I used about 50/50 cuz that was about two packs of mushrooms. It was really rich. The red wine taste didn't really come through. The duxelle flavors went well with the feta

  • What have you found to be an effective way to tell if you're chatting with a bot or a real person?
  • That's kind of the point and how's it different than a human. A human is going to weight local/recent contextual information as much more relevant to the conversation because they're actively learning and storing the information (our brains work on more of an associative memory basis than temporal). However, with our current models it's simulated by decaying weights over the data stream. So when you get conflicts between contextual correct vs "global" correct output, global has a tendency to win out that is more obvious. Remember you can't actually make changes to the model as a user without active learning. Thus the model will always eventually return to it's original behaviour as long as you can fill up the memory.

  • What have you found to be an effective way to tell if you're chatting with a bot or a real person?
  • I'm trying to tell you limited context is a feature not a bug, even other bots do the same thing like Replika. Even when all past data is stored serverside and available, it won't matter because you need to reduce the weighting or you prevent significant change in output values (and less change as the history grows larger). Time decay of information is important to making these systems useful.

  • Aurora Cannabis CEO gets $6.7M compensation bump amid falling stock, cost cutting | CBC News
  • Everyone rushing to over-supply the market was not a lack of demand. Legal weed is probably the largest new market in the last 5 years! Saying the company is underperforming because of a lack of demand when people are buying from other companies is such a hollow excuse.

  • For as long as there have been cattle, people have been stealing them. But the problem is getting worse
  • At that point why not just embed the gps tags in the ear tags that we already put on cows? Or why can't we just spray paint their butts like sheep? (Which I'm saying as a person that really knows nothing about this but if it works for the sheep...)

  • What have you found to be an effective way to tell if you're chatting with a bot or a real person?
  • The problem isn't the memory capacity, even thought the LLM can store the information, it's about prioritization/weighting. For example, if I tell chatgpt not to include a word (for example apple) in it's responses then ask it some questions then ask it a question about what are popular fruit-based pies then it will tend to pick the "better" answer of including apple pie rather than the rule I gave it a while ago about not using the word apple. We do want decaying weights on memory because most of the time old information isn't as relevant but it's one of those things that needs optimization. Imo I think we're going to get to the point where the optimal parameters for maximizing "usefullness" to the average user is different enough from what's needed to pass someone intentionally testing the AI. Mostly bc we know from other AI (like Siri) that people don't actually need that much context saved to find them helpful

  • Is there anything actually useful or novel about "AI"?
  • You don't get to complain about people being condescending to you when you are going around literally copy and pasting wikipedia. Also you're not right, major progress in this field started in the 80s although the concepts were published earlier, they were basically ignored by researchers. You're making it sound like the NNs we're using now are the same as the 60s when in reality our architectures and just even how we approach the problem have changed significantly. It's not until the 90s-00s that we started getting decent results that could even match older ML techniques like SVM or kNN.

  • What have you found to be an effective way to tell if you're chatting with a bot or a real person?
  • Last time I talked about this with the other TAs, we ended up coming to the conclusion that most papers that were decent were close to the max word count or above it (I don't think the students were really treating it as a max, more like a target). Like 50% of the word count really wasn't enough to actually complete the assignment

  • Is there anything actually useful or novel about "AI"?
  • The idea of NN or the basis itself is not AI. If you had actual read D. E. Rumelhart, G. E. Hinton, and R. J. Williams, “Learning Internal Representations by Error Propagation.” Sep. 01, 1985. then you would understand this bc that paper is about a machine learning technique not AI. If you had done your research properly instead of just reading wikipedia, then you would have also come across autoassociative memory which is the precursor to autoencoders and generative autoencoders which is the foundation of a lot of what we now think of as AI models. H. Abdi, “A Generalized Approach For Connectionist Auto-Associative Memories: Interpretation, Implication Illustration For Face Processing,” in In J. Demongeot (Ed.) Artificial, University Press, 1988, pp. 151–164.

  • Is there anything actually useful or novel about "AI"?
  • Not the specific models unless I've been missing out on some key papers. The 90s models were a lot smaller. A "deep" NN used to be 3 or more layers and that's nothing today. Data is a huge component too

  • Is there anything actually useful or novel about "AI"?
  • So I'm a reasearcher in this field and you're not wrong, there is a load of hype. So the area that's been getting the most attention lately is specifically generative machine learning techniques. The techniques are not exactly new (some date back to the 80s/90s) and they aren't actually that good at learning. By that I mean they need a lot of data and computation time to get good results. Two things that have gotten easier to access recently. However, it isn't always a requirement to have such a complex system. Even Eliza, a chatbot was made back in 1966 has suprising similar to the responses of some therapy chatbots today without using any machine learning. You should try it and see for yourself, I've seen people fooled by it and the code is really simple. Also people think things like Kalman filters are "smart" but it's just straightforward math so I guess the conclusion is people have biased opinions.

  • Recipe request: Incorporating duxelles into imitation ground meat patties

    What I've found online is recipes for putting duxelles on burgers (or stuffing) or making mushroom burgers but what I want to do is mix the duxelles with the ground to make a patty mix instead. I'm not worried about the structural integrity (in that I know it won't be great) and I'll do them smash style in a pan. I would use eggs and I'd like to keep the whole recipe vegetarian.

    I'm not sure if I should do the duxelles with red wine or without. Or if I should add cheese (I usually add feta to the mix but feta and duxelles seems odd)? Do I have to worry about the water content?

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    zappy @lemmy.ca
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